People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 05 February 02, 2014 |
Editorial
For Stability and Prosperity
A Coalition of Secular Democratic Alternative
ADDRESSING the nation
on the eve of
the Republic Day, President Pranab Mukherjee articulated the
almost universal
concern in the country over the failure to meet people’s
aspirations. Hailing
the establishment and evolution of
Indian democracy, he said, “I am not a cynic because I know that
democracy has
this marvellous ability to self-correct. It is the physician
that heals
itself, and 2014 must become a year of healing after the
fractured and
contentious politics of the last few years”.
Further he added,
“2014 is a
precipice moment in our history. We must re-discover that sense
of national
purpose and patriotism, which lifts the nation above and across
the abyss; and
back on to the road of prosperity”. And, “This chance will not
come if India
does not get a stable government. This year, we will witness the
16th General
Election to our Lok Sabha. A fractured government, hostage to
whimsical
opportunists, is always an unhappy eventuality. In 2014, it
could be
catastrophic. Each one of us is a voter; each one of us has a
deep
responsibility; we cannot let India down. It is time for
introspection and
action”.
Emphasising the need for
stability, the President said,
“Who wins the coming election is less important than the fact
that whosoever
wins must have an undiluted commitment to stability, honesty,
and the
development of India”. Hinting
at his
preferences, rightly in the interests of our country and the
people, he said, “Communal
forces and terrorists will still seek to destabilise the harmony
of our people
and the integrity of our state but they will never win”.
Thus the president
laboured to reason
that stability can only be achieved when the government is not
“hostage to
whimsical opportunists” thereby suggesting that coalitions per se can be subject to such pressures and,
hence, instability.
Such a conclusion runs
contrary to
the experience of our parliamentary democracy for more than two
decades now.
Coalition governments, by the very nature of Indian politics,
have become the
order of the day. Often the
large
number of parties and contestants in the fray is making many
draw
conclusions of fragmentation of Indian democracy. On the
contrary, the large
number of regional
parties and those
representing various sectional interests is only the reflection
of the vast
diversity of India's social reality in its polity. This must be seen as
the process of
maturation, not regression, of Indian democracy. This, however, is a
nightmare for the always
bewildered psephologist whose soundest prediction, reflected in
the current
plethora of opinion polls, now seems to be that the aggregate
shall always
be the sum of the
disaggregate.
This
maturation of Indian democracy
needs to be accompanied by certain structural changes to enrich the process further. Consider the fact that
only once in our
history since the first general elections in 1952 has a
government been
formed which
commanded over 50
per cent of the polled vote. This was
when Indira Gandhi advanced the slogan of garibi
hatao in 1971. All other governments at the centre had
more people voting
against them than supporting them. Even the Rajiv Gandhi
government, with
highest representation ever in the Lok Sabha, in 1984 had polled
48.1 per cent
with 415 seats. The
lowest was the 1998
NDA government whose alliance polled 36.2 per cent. In 2004, both Congress
and BJP together
polled only 40 per cent. If
democracy is
the rule of the majority, then that has not yet been
established.
This merits a
serious
consideration of
the proportional
representation system where people vote for the parties, who, in
turn, will
send to the parliament the number of MPs, on the basis of a prior-declared
prioritised list,
in proportion to votes they receive.
Any government that is formed on this basis by a majority of MPs
in the
parliament will necessarily reflect the majority as expressed by
the
electorate. This
issue was seriously
debated in the Constituent Assembly, but in its wisdom, it
adopted the British
`first past the post' system. The 1928 Motilal Nehru Committee
report had, in
fact, recommended
the system of
proportional representation as the best answer to reflect
India's social diversity.
Often the
example of Italy's governmental
instability as a result of the proportional representation is
advanced as an
argument against this system.
But,
remember, Italy has nevertheless continued to be in the G-7. In any case, what we
are witnessing since
1996 is not very much different even without proportional
representation. Apart
from the fact that such a system would, to a large extent,
minimise compulsions
of choosing candidates on the basis of the social composition of
the
constituency and as also the role of muscle and money power, the
question
whether this would adequately reflect India's diversity in the
parliament needs
to be properly assessed. Every
section
of India’s vast
diversity would naturally
aspire to, indeed should, be represented in the parliament. In the Indian context,
therefore, a
combination of proportional representation with the present form
may be ideal.
This could be done, for instance, by clubbing two adjoining
constituencies
where people, with two votes, vote for individual candidates as
well as the parties.
An additional
advantage of this system
would be the prescription of a minimum percentage of the
national vote required
for parties to send their representatives
to the parliament as per the submitted list. They, of course, can
be represented by individual
candidates who may win. In
the coalition
era, this would be of immense relief to foil unreasonable
pressures and
demands, or, as the president says, being “hostage
to
whimsical opportunists”.
As Indian
democracy matures, such fine
tuning must be seriously undertaken by the government that
follows these
elections. One
would have wished that
the president had made such a reference to fine-tune our
parliamentary
democracy. Unfortunately,
this was not
to be.
However, the
president touched on another
important aspect. Stating
that democracy is the “fundamental right of every citizen; for
those in power,
democracy is a sacred trust”, he hinted at more when he said
“…our democracy
has never been betrayed by the people; its fault-lines, where
they exist, are
the handiwork of those who have made power gateway to greed.” And, “If we hear
sometimes an anthem of
despair from the street, it is because people feel that a sacred
trust is being
violated.” Stating
that by the time he
will address the nation once again, there will be a new
government, he said
that governments must deliver, “what they were elected to
deliver; social and
economic progress, not at a snail’s space, but with the speed of
a
racehorse”. In
order to do this, he
suggested, “Give them (our youth) a chance and you will marvel
at the India
they can create”.
The moot point is that
how is all
this going to be achieved? How and from where/whom are the
resources going to
be mobilised? What are the mechanisms and vehicles that are
available or will
be created to achieve this?
Neither the
president nor the principal political parties – Congress or BJP
– obviously
with reason, do not talk of the fine print.
Hence, such proclamations remain mere declarations of
intent –
unrealisable unless accompanied by a blueprint of an action
programme. This
remained unaddressed.
Prior to the just
concluded Davos,
World Economic Forum,
described by the
London Mayor as “a constellation of egos and an orgy of
adulation”, the Oxfam
presented a paper showing that 85 richest billionaires in the
world “own the
wealth of half the world’s population”.
Such growing inequality helps “the richest undermine
democratic
processes and drive
policies that
promote their interests at the expense of everyone else”. Does this not sound
chillingly familiar to
all of us in India? Who, hon’ble president, is then violating
the `sacred
trust’ of Indian democracy? At Davos, none of the world’s
leaders suggested any
new regulations to check such obscene profit maximisation and,
thus,
strengthened the ground for a continued global economic slowdown
and crisis.
Such widening
inequalities feeding
recurrent crisis and
economic slowdown
multiplying people’s miseries can be prevented in India,
insulating us
from the impending
extended global
crisis only by an alternative economic vision -
alternative to both the Congress and the BJP. A vision
where the
resources available in the country are prevented from being
looted through mega
corruption scams, or, being doled out to the rich as massive tax
concessions
and, instead, are mobilised for massive public investments to
build our
much-needed infrastructure.
This would
generate substantial additional employment, significantly
enhance the purchasing
power in the hands of our people, laying the basis for a
sustainable and more
equitable economic growth trajectory.
The president
concluded his address
by saying, “1950 saw the birth of our Republic. I am sure that
2014 will be the
year of resurgence”. Such
a resurgence,
eminently feasible, can only happen, hon’ble president, when
2014 will ensure
that such an alternative policy trajectory is put into practice.
This can
necessarily happen only with a coalition of parties that can
offer a secular
democratic political alternative sans the
Congress and the BJP. This
alone is the
alternative that can answer the questions posed by the president
and provide
both stability and prosperity for
our
country and our people.
(January
29, 2014)